State v. Larabee
State v. Larabee
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The writ of error in this case brings' up for review an adjudication of the Supreme Court, affirming the proceedings of surveyors of the highways, appointed, by the Court of Common Pleas of the county of Ocean, in making an alteration in a public road of said county. The-alteration consists in vacating a part of the Toms River and Freehold road, beginning at a stake in the middle of said road at the village of Lakewood, and running in an easterly direction, about twenty-five hundred feet, to a stake in the middle of said road and there to end, and laying out a new road between said beginning and ending points, to‘ take the place of the part so vacated. The alteration widens that part of the-road from a width of two rods to a width of fifty feet, and changes the angle of the road somewhat, the new road running part of the way only over the bed of the part of the old road vacated.
The pu’incipal grounds upon which the validity of the proceedings was challenged in this court (several grounds advanced in the Supreme Court having been abandoned) are— first, that the assessments of damages according to the return are made to the respective owners for the land taken in the* laying out of the aforesaid road, and not for the damages they would sustain by the alteration of the part of the road in question ; second, that the road as laid out invades a portion
• The court below, in dealing with the reasons filed in that ■court, held that the depositions taken in the cause, by which it was sought to explain, modify or contradict the return, would not be considered, because they were taken without the -special authority necessary to validate them, referring to Conover v. Bird, 27 Vroom 228. In this ruling I find no •error. It was further held by the court below that the reasons based upon allegations of fact dehors the record were not sustained by the proofs. Since this court can review on writ of error questions of law only, it is manifest that- the .assignments of error based upon such allegations of fact cannot be sustained.
This disposes of all the grounds of challenge -to the proceedings below above mentioned except the first, as to the validity of the assessment.
The opinion below seems to be silent upon this point unless it be embraced, as was insisted by the plaintiff in error, in that paragraph which says “ the questions raised by the first class of reasons are reviewable only by the statutory appeal by caveat and application for the appointment of freeholders.” But however that may be, this question was properly raised ■upon the return itself as a part of the record, and was and is entitled to be heard and determined in the appellate tribunal.
The language of the statute (Gen. Stat., p. 2809, § 13) is u that whenever any public road or highway shall be laid out or altered by the surveyors, or a majority of them, mentioned in this act, the said surveyors shall immediately thereafter make an assessment of the damages, if any, the owner of any land or real estate other than the applicant or applicants for such road shall sustain by laying out or altering the same, over and above the advantage that will, in their judgment, accrue to said owner.”
The return of the surveyors shows that the application, in
The counsel of the defendant in error insisted upon the argument that this seeming defect in the assessment is made good by a further paragraph of the return where it says: “And we do further return that we have taken into consideration the advantages that will accrue to said persons,
The principle which requires a strict observance of statutory requirements in proceedings like this is well stated by Chief Justice Hornblower in State v. Van Geison et al., 3 Gr. 339, where he says that “a statutory proceeding affecting the rights of individuals, where what has been done is to be certified by the persons executing such special authority, or a record is to be made thereof, and such certificate or record is to conclude the rights of parties, it must appear upon the certificate or record that everything was done which the statute required.”
Since the return of the road and the assessment of damages are in fact but one proceeding, where the assessment is illegal and void, the return of the road is also vitiated. State, Kelley, pros., v. Garretson et al., 3 Zab. 388.
But this defect in the return is not now necessarily fatal to the proceedings, for under the statute found in the General Statutes, page 2845, section 195, it has been held that the record may be remitted to the Court of Common Pleas and an order made, on motion of the applicants, requiring the surveyors who signed the return to review their- proceedings and make an amended return, correcting, among other things, the errors and defects in the assessment of damages in their
• The result is that the judgment below will be reversed and the record remitted, so that an order may be made remitting the proceedings to the Common Pleas, to be there set aside unless application be made to properly amend the return.
For affirmance—None.
For reversed—The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Depue, Dixon, Gummere, Ludlow, Magie, Bark alow, Bogert, Dayton, Hendrickson, Nixon. 12.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE, ROBERT FOWLER, PROSECUTOR, IN ERROR v. ALBERT S. LARABEE, IN ERROR
- Status
- Published